The search for the missing Malaysia Airlines plane may return to the possibility that the jet landed somewhere, according to the latest media reports.

The New Strait Times quoted sources close to the investigation as saying that the failure to turn up any debris at the current southern Indian Ocean search site was causing a rethink among investigators.

The sources said they were considering revisiting the scenario that the plane had landed at an unknown location.

“The thought of it landing somewhere else is not impossible, as we have not found a single debris that could be linked to MH370. However, the possibility of a specific country hiding the plane when more than 20 nations are searching for it seems absurd,” the sources said.

The sources told the paper that another possibility was that the plane had crash landed in a remote spot.

MH370 went missing March 8 on a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing along with its crew and 227 passengers, most of them Chinese.

“It has been determined that the current weather conditions are resulting in heavy seas and poor visibility, and would make any air search activities ineffective and potentially hazardous,” the Joint Agency Coordination Center said in a statement.

Up to 10 military aircraft were part of the visual search. The 10 ships involved in the search will be able to continue their planned activities.

The unmanned submersible Bluefin-21 is still scouring the ocean depths on its ninth mission trying to locate wreckage from MH370.

So far it has searched about two-thirds of the underwater area, with no contacts of interest found to date.

Meanwhile, family members of passengers on the missing flight have criticized the Malaysian government for an investigation that they say has been mismanaged.

Appearing on US morning television, Sarah Bajc, the girlfriend of MH370 American passenger Philip Wood, told “Today” host Matt Lauer that passengers’ loved ones all just “wanted to go back to square one.”